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mp3s: search
While judge Alex Kozinski is getting a ton of press for accidentally sharing pornographic images from his webserver, Justin Levine notes that the report concerning what was on the server also found music MP3s from musicians like Johnny Cash, Bob Dylan and Weird Al Yankovic. Levine wonders if the RIAA will now sue this federal judge as well. In fact, things could get tricky in that some research suggests not only was Kozinski storing MP3s, he may have actively been sharing some of those MP3s as well. That same link mentions that in one of many copyright infringement lawsuits concerning the company Perfect 10, Kozinski wrote a dissenting opinion suggesting that facilitating copyright infringement should be seen as infringement as well:
in MP3
via Techdirt @ 12:03 13th Jun
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7digital.com said DRM-free music is much more popular than tracks with the controversial technology built in Online music retailer 7digital.com has announced that it expects to stock DRM-free MP3s from the Sony BMG and Universal record labels in the near future.
in MP3
via Web-User @ 13:30 7th Jul
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Rhapsody will sell MP3s in a new digital download store launched Monday for U.S. consumers, an offering that will pose fresh competition to Apple's highly successful iTunes Music Store. The songs will not have DRM (Digital Rights Management) technology, which puts restrictions on how music can be transferred between devices and PCs, and will be compatible with Apple's iPod line.
in MP3
via Neowin.net @ 17:06 30th Jun
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Rhapsody will sell MP3s in a new digital download store launched Monday for U.S. consumers, an offering that will pose fresh competition to Apple's highly successful iTunes Music Store.
in MP3
via ITworld.com @ 13:19 30th Jun
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Rhapsody will sell MP3s in a new digital download store launched Monday for U.S. consumers, an offering that will pose fresh competition to Apple's highly successful iTunes Music Store.
in MP3
via PC World @ 13:19 30th Jun
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Rhapsody will sell MP3s in a new digital download store launched Monday for U.S. consumers, an offering that will pose fresh competition to Apple's highly successful iTunes Music Store.
in MP3
via CIO Magazine @ 13:21 30th Jun
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Rhapsody will sell MP3s in a new digital download store launched Monday for U.S. consumers, an offering that will pose fresh competition to Apple's highly successful iTunes Music Store.
in MP3
via NetworkWorld @ 13:21 30th Jun
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Rhapsody will sell MP3s in a new digital download store launched Monday for U.S. consumers, an offering that will pose fresh competition to Apple's highly successful iTunes Store.
in MP3
via Macworld @ 10:23 30th Jun
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LOS ANGELES (May 20) - Napster Inc. began selling MP3s Tuesday, a move the online music service hopes will lure iPod users and turn around Napster's sliding fortunes.
in MP3
via AOL @ 4:40 21st May
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Did you attend Congress but miss some lectures you really wanted to attend? Or perhaps you were not able to go this year and want to benefit from the excellence of the scientific programme. With our Congress MP3s you don't have to miss out.
in MP3
via BSAVA @ 6:12 14th Jun
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LOS ANGELES: Napster, the online music service, began selling MP3s on Tuesday, hoping to lure iPod users and turn around the company's sliding fortunes.
in MP3
via International Herald Tribune @ 2:51 21st May
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snydeq writes "Kaspersky Labs has discovered malware that inserts links to malicious Web pages within ASF media files, posing a danger to Windows users who download music files from P2P networks. Infected files launch IE and load a page that asks the user to download a codec. The download, a Trojan horse, installs a proxy program to route other traffic through the PC. The malware also has worm-like qualities, according to Secure Computing. It searches for MP3s, transcodes them to WMA format, wraps them in an ASF container, and adds links to further copies of the malware, all without modifying the .MP3 extension."
in Computer Security
via Slashdot @ 20:06 18th Jul
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imageThe best hope for a company like Napster (NSDQ: NAPS) is that the subscription music model really starts to take hold. Indeed the company has said that subscriptions would remain its key focus, even as it jumps into the DRM-free MP3 game. Today the company is unveiling its new download store, which it first promised back in January. It claims that at 6 million DRM-free tracks from all four major labels plus thousands of indies it has the largest selection of any competitor. Pricing looks pretty familiar at $.99 per track and $9.95 per album. And it should go without saying that since they’re MP3s, then yes, they play on the iPod.
in MP3
via PaidContent.org @ 15:51 20th May
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"Napster Inc. begins selling MP3s Tuesday, a move the online music service hopes will lure iPod users and turn around Napster's sliding fortunes," Alex Veiga reports for The Associated Press.
in Gadgets
via Mac Daily News @ 17:21 20th May
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Dada Entertainment and Sony BMG have signed a deal to make full-length DRM-free MP3s available to Dada’s subscribers. The service charges $9.99 a month for 15 tokens, each of which can be redeemed for a ringtone, game or other mobile content—the new deal will let people download full songs to their computer and transfer them to a mobile phone or digital music player. Dada wants other labels to join, and expects to offer over-the-air downloads in the coming months (to AT&T (NYSE: T), Sprint (NYSE: S), T-Mobile, Alltel (NYSE: AT), Virgin, Cellular One, Boost, Cricket, and Nextel). Dada is also repurposing its social network to focus on music, and changing its name to The Music Movement.
in MP3
via PaidContent.org @ 17:08 15th May
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imageBits of Paradise Products is now offering each of SonicMood’s 28 “moods” as 30 and 120 minute MP3s and the application has been updated to version 4.8.6.
in MP3
via Macsimum News @ 10:26 19th Jun
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Following on the heels of Real's Rhapsody MP3 store, Verizon today expanded its VCast Music store to include both MP3s and the Rhapsody subscription service. The former lets users of Verizon's PC software as well as any MP3-supporting cellphone on the company's 3G network download unprotected songs that can be used as the customer likes; that includes loading content on to phones that wouldn't otherwise support VCast songs or to outside software and devices, including iPods.
in MP3
via MacNN @ 13:21 30th Jun
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A German software developer has released a new web application that lets Windows users download and save videos or MP3s.
in MP3
via Graphics Exchange News @ 9:17 7th Jul
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Retail chain FYE (For Your Entertainment) has begun testing an "MP3 kiosk" in two of its stores, sources have told Ars Technica. Allowing customers to browse and purchase MP3s from a retail store, as well as providing a convenient way to get the music back onto a computer at home, FYE may have a decent chance at bringing MP3 shopping to the real world.
in MP3
via ArsTechnica @ 22:27 2nd Jun
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'Get your MP3s here'Napster has a message for all you iPod and iPhone owners: It's now selling DRM-free MP3s.…
in MP3
via Addict3d.org @ 0:35 21st May
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If you want to download free mp3 files for Zune, it is important to be wary. Downloading free mp3s from the Internet poses a number of dangers. Getting adwares, spywares, and unwanted pop-ups, not to mention harmful computer viruses, are just some of the pesky things that come with it. But you can get rid of these dangers by sourcing your mp3s from reliable sites. Here are 3 places on the Internet that make reliable options.
in MP3
via One Stop Articles @ 16:48 10th Jun
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Many people all over the world are asking about "legal Zune music downloads". Zune is unlike other popular media devices. It frees owners from DRM download requirements. DRM or digital rights management is copyright information embedded on mp3s. Most mp3s are encoded with DRM, which prohibits downloaders from distributing songs. Because of DRM restriction, it is now possible to legally download Zune music. But where can you find them?
in Online Legal Issues
via One Stop Articles @ 21:42 1st Jul
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New York - Pop culture-inspired fashion retail store chain Hot Topic plans next month to launch its own digital music store, ShockHound, which will sell music from at least three of the four major labels in MP3 format, The New York Times reported on Monday. "For us, music merchandise is where the profit is," Hot Topic president Jerry Cook told The Times. "The reason we carry CDs in the stores is that to be in a music-centered business and not have music would be a contradiction. And you can't be an online music store and not have MP3s." In addition to MP3s from a wide range of artists, the ShockHound store also expects to sell t-shirts from more than 1,000 bands, as well as music on vinyl.
in MP3
via Digital Media Wire @ 12:47 1st Jul
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